The Hardware Locality (hwloc) team is pleased to announce the release
of v0.9.2 (we made some trivial documentation-only changes after the
v0.9.1 tarballs were posted publicly, and have therefore re-released
with the version "v0.9.2").
http://www.open-mpi.org/projects/hwloc/
(mirrors will update shortly)
hwloc provides command line tools and a C API to obtain the
hierarchical map of key computing elements, such as: NUMA memory
nodes, shared caches, processor sockets, processor cores, and
processor "threads". hwloc also gathers various attributes such as
cache and memory information, and is portable across a variety of
different operating systems and platforms.
hwloc primarily aims at helping high-performance computing (HPC)
applications, but is also applicable to any project seeking to exploit
code and/or data locality on modern computing platforms.
*** Note that the hwloc project represents the merger of the
libtopology project from INRIA and the Portable Linux Processor
Affinity (PLPA) sub-project from Open MPI. *Both of these prior
projects are now deprecated.* The hwloc v0.9.1/v0.9.2 release is
essentially a "re-branding" of the libtopology code base, but with
both a few genuinely new features and a few PLPA-like features added
in. More new features and more PLPA-like features will be added to
hwloc over time.
hwloc supports the following operating systems:
* Linux (including old kernels not having sysfs topology
information, with
knowledge of cpusets, offline cpus, and Kerrighed support)
* Solaris
* AIX
* Darwin / OS X
* OSF/1 (a.k.a., Tru64)
* HP-UX
* Microsoft Windows
hwloc only reports the number of processors on unsupported operating
systems; no topology information is available.
hwloc is available under the BSD license.
--
Jeff Squyres
jsquy...@cisco.com